Carbon

来自Big Physics

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late 18th century: from French carbone, from Latin carbo, carbon- ‘coal, charcoal’.


Ety img carbon.png

wiktionary

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Borrowed from French carbone, coined by Antoine Lavoisier, from Latin carbō, carbōnem(“ charcoal, coal”), from Proto-Indo-European *kerh₃-(“to burn”).


etymonline

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carbon (n.)

non-metallic element occurring naturally as diamond, graphite, or charcoal, 1789, coined 1787 in French by Lavoisier as charbone, from Latin carbonem (nominative carbo) "a coal, glowing coal; charcoal," from PIE root *ker- (3) "heat, fire."

Carbon 14, long-lived radioactive isotope used in dating organic deposits, is from 1936. Carbon-dating (using carbon 14) is recorded from 1958. Carbon cycle is attested from 1912; carbon footprint was in use by 2001. Carbon-paper "paper faced with carbon, used between two sheets for reproduction on the lower of what is drawn or written on the upper" is from 1855, earlier it was carbonic paper (1850).